Straight Pool
Encyclopedia
Straight pool, also called 14.1 continuous or simply 14.1, is a pocket billiards
Pocket billiards
Pool, also more formally known as pocket billiards or pool billiards , is the family of cue sports and games played on a pool table having six receptacles called pockets along the , into which balls are deposited as the main goal of play. Popular versions include eight-ball and nine-ball...

 game, and was the common sport of championship competition until overtaken by faster-playing games like nine-ball (and to a lesser extent eight-ball). This is the classic game from the history of pool and most of the greatest players of all time were known to play this game.

In straight pool, the shooter may attempt to any ball on the table. The object is to reach a set number of points determined by agreement before the game. One point is scored for each ball pocketed where no is made. A typical game might require a player to score 100 points, meaning at least 100 balls must be pocketed to win. In professional competition, straight pool is usually played to 150 points. Straight pool is a game, meaning the player must indicate the intended object ball and pocket on every shot. How the ball reaches the pocket is irrelevant, as long as the called ball enters the called pocket (except on a foul shot).

The game was formerly the dominant pool game in the United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

, and immortalized in the 1961 film The Hustler
The Hustler (film)
The Hustler is a 1961 American drama film directed by Robert Rossen from the 1959 novel of the same name he and Sidney Carroll adapted for the screen...

. The game remains well known in the United States, Europe, Argentina, Japan and the Philippines, but is more obscure elsewhere. The first WPA
World Pool-Billiard Association
The World Pool-Billiard Association is the international governing body for pocket billiards . The group was formed in 1987, and was initially headed by a provisional board of directors consisting of representatives from Japan, the United States, Sweden, and Germany...

-sanctioned World Straight Pool Championship
World Straight Pool Championship
The World Straight Pool Championship is an annual pocket billiards competition held in New Brunswick, New Jersey, since 2006. It is the current global professional title for straight pool , and is organized by Dragon Promotions, in part to restore the game's popularity in the United States...

 was held in 2006 (the winner was Germany's Thorsten Hohmann, a player who also won the world nine-ball title three years earlier). Possibly as a consequence of this renewed professional competitive attention, public interest in the game has undergone a resurgence, as reflected in the amount of coverage 14.1 now receives in the billiards press.

The initial rack

In the initial in straight pool, the fifteen are racked in a triangular rack
Rack (billiards)
A rack is the name given to a frame used to organize billiard balls at the beginning of a game. Rack may also be used as a verb to describe the act of setting billiard balls in starting position in billiards games that make use of racks , as well as a noun to describe the balls in that starting...

, with the center of the apex ball placed over the . Traditionally, the 1 ball is placed at the rack's right corner, and the 5 ball placed at the rack's left corner, although this is not an official rule. Other balls are placed at random and must touch their neighbors. However, it is considered courtesy by some to place a at the rack's apex.

Unlike in most pool games, where pocketing a ball and spreading the balls is the aim on the break, the object in straight pool's standard initial is to leave the opponent with a . This is because the call-pocket rule includes the break shot.

On the break, either a ball must be pocketed in a designated pocket or the cue ball and at least two additional balls must touch a rail. The failure to accomplish one of these two options results in a foul. Fouling on the initial break results in a special penalty of a loss of 2 points. In addition, the opponent has the choice either of accepting the table in position, or alternatively of having the balls and requiring the offending player to repeat the opening break.

All other fouls during the game result in a one point deduction, including fouling on an intragame rack. However, a third foul in a row at any time in a straight pool game results in a loss of 15 points (for purposes of this rule, a foul on the initial break, though it is a loss of two points, is not counted as two fouls). The 15 point deduction is in addition to the one point loss for each foul. Thus, the first two fouls are a loss of one point each, and the third foul in a row is a loss of 16 points; 1 point for the foul, and 15 points for it being the third consecutive foul.

Intragame racking

Because straight pool is played to a specific number of points normally far in excess of the 15 points available in the initial rack, multiple intragame racks are necessary. Intragame racking employs a separate set of rules from those in place at the game's start.

To reach the point where an intragame rack becomes necessary, the balls are played until only the and one object ball remain on the table's surface. At that time, if neither the cue ball nor the fifteenth object ball remains in the rack area (or is interfering with racking in the rack area), the fourteen pocketed object balls are racked with no apex ball, and the rack is placed so that if the apex ball were in the rack, its center would rest directly over the table's foot spot. Play then continues with the cue ball shot from where it rested and the fifteenth, non-racked, object ball from where it rested prior to racking.

The "14.1 continuous" appellation derives from this racking practice, i.e., that fourteen racked object balls and one remaining object ball left in position is presented to the players at the conclusion of each intragame rack. The shooter will then normally try to pocket the unracked fifteenth ball, and at the same time have the cue ball into the fourteen racked balls, spreading them so that subsequent shots are available, and a run may continue.

A number of rules have developed which detail what must be done when one or both of the cue ball and fifteenth object ball are either in the rack area at the time an intragame rack is necessary, or are in such proximity to the intragame racking area, that the physical rack cannot be used without moving the one or the other. The rules also vary depending on whether the cue ball or fifteenth object ball are resting on the table's . Such rules are detailed on the following chart (note therein that the refers to the area behind the table's ).
Straight Pool Intragame Racking Chart
15th ball lies Cue ball lies
In the Rack Not in the Rack and
not on the Head Spot
On The Head Spot
In The Rack 15th ball: foot spot
Cue Ball: in kitchen
15th ball: head spot
Cue Ball: in position
15th ball: center spot
Cue Ball: in position
Pocketed 15th ball: foot spot
Cue Ball: in kitchen
15th ball: foot spot
Cue Ball: in position
15th ball: foot spot
Cue Ball: in position
Behind Head String,
but not on Head Spot
15th ball: in position
Cue Ball: head spot
Not behind Head String,
and not in the Rack
15th ball: in position
Cue Ball: in kitchen
On Head Spot 15th ball: in position
Cue Ball: center spot


It is sometimes easier to remember where to place the cue ball and 15th ball during an intragame rack by remembering a set of logical rules instead of trying to memorize the BCA rules table above. The rules are:

1. If lying in the rack, only one of the two balls is moved up-table (cue ball or 15th ball).

2. The moved ball must be moved to another location if its original destination is occupied.

3. A pocketed 15th ball is equivalent to lying within the rack.


The "kitchen" refers to the entire section of table behind the headstring and is the cue-ball's "home". The headspot itself is the 15th ball's home. The logical rules are applied as follows:
Lying in rack Ball to move Move to kitchen? Move to head spot? Move to center spot?
Neither Neither --- --- ---
15th 15th --- Yes (15th's home) If cue on head spot.
Cue Cue Yes (cue's home) If 15th in kitchen. If 15th on head spot.
Both Cue (can't re-rack with cue there!) Yes (cue's home) --- ---

Mosconi's High Run

One of the all-time greatest players, Willie Mosconi
Willie Mosconi
William Joseph Mosconi , best known as Willie Mosconi, was an American professional pool player from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Between the years of 1941 and 1957, he won the World Straight Pool Championship an unmatched fifteen times. For most of the 20th century, his name was essentially...

, had a record high run of 526 points. Here is what he said about the high run:
On March 19, in Springfield, Ohio, I ran 526 balls, a record that still stands. I was playing a two-hundred-point match against an
amateur by the name of Earl Bruney in the East High Billiard Club. He made three balls off the break, then I ran two hundred and just kept going. The run took two hours and ten minutes, which means that over the span I averaged four balls a minute. I finally missed a difficult cut shot, but by that time I was weary; it was almost a relief to have it come to an end. There were about three hundred people in the audience, and one of them was an attorney who prepared an affidavit
Affidavit
An affidavit is a written sworn statement of fact voluntarily made by an affiant or deponent under an oath or affirmation administered by a person authorized to do so by law. Such statement is witnessed as to the authenticity of the affiant's signature by a taker of oaths, such as a notary public...

 attesting to the validity of my claim to a new record. A few days later, the BCA gave its stamp of approval.

See also

  • Willie Mosconi
    Willie Mosconi
    William Joseph Mosconi , best known as Willie Mosconi, was an American professional pool player from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Between the years of 1941 and 1957, he won the World Straight Pool Championship an unmatched fifteen times. For most of the 20th century, his name was essentially...

     - Holder of the BCA
    Billiard Congress of America
    Billiard Congress of America is a governing body for cue sports in North America , the regional member organization of the World Pool-Billiard Association...

     straight pool high run world record, for running 526 balls in a row
  • World Straight Pool Championship
    World Straight Pool Championship
    The World Straight Pool Championship is an annual pocket billiards competition held in New Brunswick, New Jersey, since 2006. It is the current global professional title for straight pool , and is organized by Dragon Promotions, in part to restore the game's popularity in the United States...


External links

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